The inventory of homes for sale has been at — or near — record lows in recent months. In June the Houston area hit a 2.9-months supply on for-sale inventory meaning the Bayou City has one of the tightest real estate markets in the country. In June, homes stayed on the market for an average of only 46 days, the lowest days-on-market average ever in Houston, and the Realtors association reports.

The lack of supply means that sellers are often getting multiple offers from would-be buyers and prices are going up, Bogany says.

The average price of single-family home in June was $283,697, the all-time record high for the Houston area, the Realtors Association reports.

“June’s positive sales performance is a testament to the strength of the Houston housing market,” says HAR Chair Chaille Ralph of Heritage Texas Properties. “We were thrilled to see home sales rebound after May’s decline and we hope that as new listings come onto the market and home construction continues, inventory levels will rise to a point where we can truly say that balance has been restored.”

Bogany, former chair of the Texas Association of Realtors, says the shortage homes won’t be eased until home builders can pick up the pace of construction.

Hot neighborhoods

Neighborhoods around the Energy Corridor of west Houston have the tightest inventories of all, says Fama. Some of the Energy Corridor communities — both north and south of Interstate 10 — have less than an unheard-of -2-months supply of homes for sale.

Buyers who are relocating to Houston for jobs in the Energy Corridor of west Houston must be nimble and they may not be accustomed to a market where homes go under contract within hours of being listed for sale.

The high-rise condo market in Houston is hot and high-rise prices have gone up 23 percent over the last two years, Fama says.

The predicted rise in mortgage rates could be a factor in housing. Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors predicts rates will rise to around 5 percent by the end of the year. The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is around 4.1 percent currently according to Freddie Mac. But unless rates jump to 6 or 7 percent the modest increases will likely impact only first-time homebuyers at the low-end of the price spectrum.

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